For 25 years the Lake Erie & Western Railroad Company maintained and operated on its right of way at Elliott, Ill., a side track passing a grain elevator and coal yard operated by one Cameron. The elevator stood partly on the right of way and partly on ground owned by Cameron, his occupancy of the former being under a lease. In May, 1915, the elevator was destroyed by fire, whereupon the company exercised a reserved option to cancel the lease and also took up the side track. Cameron protested against the latter, proceeded to rebuild the elevator at its former location, but wholly on his own ground, and in June, 1915, filed with the Public Utilities Commission a petition praying that a restoration of the track be ordered. After notice and hearing the commission granted such an order and it was upheld by the circuit and supreme courts of the state. State Public Utilities Commission ex rel. v. Lake Erie & W. R. Co., 277 Ill. 574, 115 N. E. 519.
[249 U.S. 422, 424]
It is contended here, as it was in the state courts, that the order contravenes the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, in that it takes property of the railroad company for private use, or for public use without compensation.

Under the laws of the state the side track before its removal, although used principally in moving freight from and to Cameron's elevator and coal yard, was open to use by the public and subject to public control like other parts of the company's road; in other words, it was a track which the state impressed with a public character. Truesdale v. Grape Sugar Co., 101 Ill. 561, 567; Chicago Dock & Canal Co. v. Garrity, 115 Ill. 155, 167, 171, 3 N. E. 448; Chicago & Alton R. R. Co. v. Suffern, 129 Ill. 274, 286, 21 N. E. 824. Not only so, but the statute under which its restoration was ordered contains express provisions whereby it will retain that character and be open to use by other shippers as well as by Cameron. Hurd's Stat. 1916, c. 111a, 45.

The shipments for which the track has been used have yielded the company a revenue of about $20,000 each year for several years. What the cost of restoration will be the record does not disclose, but the commission, with knowledge of such matters, has found that it is justified by the business reasonably to be expected; and the Su-
[249 U.S. 422, 425]
preme Court of the state, besides sustaining that and other findings of the commission, aptly points out that but for the hasty and improper removal of the track the company 'would not be at the expense of replacing it.' When the track is restored the company will own it and be entitled to make a reasonable charge for its use, just as is the case with other property employed in the company's transportation service.

Applying the decision just announced in Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co. v. Ochs Brick & Tile Co.,
249 U.S. 416
, 39 Sup. Ct. 343, we think the order does not take property of the company for private use, or for public use without compensation, in contravention of the Fourteenth Amendment.